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The New Yorker: Fiction

Roger Angell Reads John Updike

The New Yorker: Fiction

WNYC Studios and The New Yorker

Yorker, Wnyc, Literature, Books, New, Fiction, Arts

4.63.6K Ratings

🗓️ 12 February 2009

⏱️ 36 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Roger Angell reads John Updike's short story "Playing with Dynamite," and talks with The New Yorker's fiction editor, Deborah Treisman, about editing Updike.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is the New Yorker Fiction Podcast from the New Yorker magazine.

0:04.8

I'm Debra Treesman, Fiction Editor at the New Yorker.

0:08.1

Each month, we invite a writer to choose a story from the magazine's archives to read and discuss.

0:13.8

John Updike died on January 27.

0:16.9

Between 1954 and 2008, he contributed literally hundreds of pieces of fiction and poetry,

0:23.1

book reviews and essays to the magazine.

0:25.6

This month, Roger Angel, Updike's longtime editor at the New Yorker,

0:30.1

will read a story from 1992, called Playing with Dynamite.

0:34.3

All around them, as he and his wife do a hip-deep in children, marriage is blew up.

0:39.5

Marriage counselors, child psychiatrists, lawyers, real estate agents, prospered in the ruins.

0:47.2

Roger, you are Updike's Fiction Editor at the magazine for more than 30 years.

0:51.4

How did you start working with him?

0:53.0

I was in the Fiction Department back then, and William Maxwell, the writer and also New York editor,

1:00.3

had been John's editor, and when he left the magazine to become a full-time novelist,

1:04.9

I succeeded Maxwell, and it was strange because John is younger by a dozen years than I am,

1:11.0

but it was like getting an older writer, because he started writing.

1:14.8

He'd started writing at such an early age and with such great accomplishment.

1:19.3

Can you talk a bit about what it was like to work on his stories?

1:22.2

It was a pleasure because he was patient with editing, and if I suggested that the paragraph needed a little something more,

1:29.2

there was something that didn't seem as clear as it should have been in a certain passage.

1:33.6

He was always patient and listened, and then we go through the process of trying to get it right,

1:39.1

which good writers always want to do, and they'd go back to it again and again,

...

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